The player controls Netflix left out. Auto-skip intros and recaps, jump 5 or 90 seconds, pop out picture-in-picture, change speed, boost volume past 100% — without lifting your hand off the keyboard.
Companion presses the buttons you'd press anyway — the moment they appear. Every one has its own switch in the popup.
Opening titles disappear the instant they become skippable. No more theme song on episode twelve.
"Previously on…" is dismissed before it starts. Watching in one sitting? You don't need the refresher.
Advances the moment credits roll — no countdown, no waiting. Pure binge mode.
Auto-confirms the prompt so a long binge never pauses itself overnight.
Two new button pairs sit right beside Netflix's own 10-second controls — for nudging past a line you missed, or leaping over a long stretch. Step frame-by-frame when you need the exact moment.

Slow a tense scene to 0.1× or fly through a slow one at 4×. Push volume up to 500% past Netflix's ceiling, and even out loud action against quiet dialogue with the normalizer.

Pop the video into a floating window and keep watching while you work in another tab — one click, or one keypress.

Active on any watch page, ignored while you type in search.
No personal information, no browsing history, no analytics. The extension never phones home.
Everything runs as a lightweight content script inside your tab. No sign-in, no API calls.
The single thing stored is your toggles, speed and volume preferences, and a local skip counter — synced via Chrome.
Add Companion to Chrome, open any title, and the controls appear right in the player.